US20110220324A1 - Building for a computer centre with devices for efficient cooling - Google Patents

Building for a computer centre with devices for efficient cooling Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20110220324A1
US20110220324A1 US13/001,947 US200913001947A US2011220324A1 US 20110220324 A1 US20110220324 A1 US 20110220324A1 US 200913001947 A US200913001947 A US 200913001947A US 2011220324 A1 US2011220324 A1 US 2011220324A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
racks
data centre
heat
computer hardware
cooling circuit
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
US13/001,947
Other versions
US9476605B2 (en
Inventor
Volker Lindenstruth
Horst Stöcker
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
E3 Computing GmbH
E3 CUBE COMPUTING GmbH
ECUBE COMPUTING GmbH
Original Assignee
Volker Lindenstruth
Stoecker Horst
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Volker Lindenstruth, Stoecker Horst filed Critical Volker Lindenstruth
Publication of US20110220324A1 publication Critical patent/US20110220324A1/en
Assigned to ECUBE COMPUTING GMBH reassignment ECUBE COMPUTING GMBH ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LINDENSTRUTH, VOLKER, STOCKER, HORST
Assigned to E3 CUBE COMPUTING GMBH reassignment E3 CUBE COMPUTING GMBH ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LINDENSTRUTH, VOLKER, STOCKER, HORST
Assigned to E3 COMPUTING GMBH reassignment E3 COMPUTING GMBH ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LINDENSTRUTH, VOLKER, STOCKER, HORST
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US9476605B2 publication Critical patent/US9476605B2/en
Active legal-status Critical Current
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24FAIR-CONDITIONING; AIR-HUMIDIFICATION; VENTILATION; USE OF AIR CURRENTS FOR SCREENING
    • F24F11/00Control or safety arrangements
    • F24F11/0001Control or safety arrangements for ventilation
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04HBUILDINGS OR LIKE STRUCTURES FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSES; SWIMMING OR SPLASH BATHS OR POOLS; MASTS; FENCING; TENTS OR CANOPIES, IN GENERAL
    • E04H5/00Buildings or groups of buildings for industrial or agricultural purposes
    • E04H5/02Buildings or groups of buildings for industrial purposes, e.g. for power-plants or factories
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K7/00Constructional details common to different types of electric apparatus
    • H05K7/20Modifications to facilitate cooling, ventilating, or heating
    • H05K7/20709Modifications to facilitate cooling, ventilating, or heating for server racks or cabinets; for data centers, e.g. 19-inch computer racks
    • H05K7/20763Liquid cooling without phase change
    • H05K7/2079Liquid cooling without phase change within rooms for removing heat from cabinets
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04HBUILDINGS OR LIKE STRUCTURES FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSES; SWIMMING OR SPLASH BATHS OR POOLS; MASTS; FENCING; TENTS OR CANOPIES, IN GENERAL
    • E04H5/00Buildings or groups of buildings for industrial or agricultural purposes
    • E04H2005/005Buildings for data processing centers

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a data centre building structure, which is adapted to house a multiplicity of racks being designed to provide storage space for computer hardware.
  • the data centre building is equipped with cooling means in order to provide dissipation of heat being generated by the computer hardware.
  • FIG. 1 a conventional data centre building according to the prior art is sketched in FIG. 1 . It comprises a false floor for a computer infrastructure, which is typically housed in 19 ′′ rack enclosures. The cooling is accomplished by cold air, which is pumped into the false floors having holes at the appropriate locations in front of the racks. In this way cold air is supplied at the air intakes of the computer racks.
  • the floor 106 carries the false floor, assembled from vertical steel bars 107 , carrying the floor tiles 104 , 105 , which in turn carry the computer infrastructure, for instance 19 ′′ racks 102 .
  • These racks 102 typically host 19 ′′ rack mounted computer infrastructure 101 , which is horizontally mounted and acquires air at the front-side of the rack and produces warm air at the back side.
  • the false floor tiles In order to cool the computers, the false floor tiles have appropriate air holes 104 , such that cold air 110 can be ingested into the racks 102 .
  • an encapsulated cold air isle 103 is provided in order to avoid, that hot air 109 short circuits the flow of cold air.
  • the provided cold air 110 , 111 may only leave the isle 103 via the computers' air intake and correspondingly there is no other way for the heated air to enter this space.
  • Document WO 02/052107 A2 further discloses a data centre building comprising a ground floor and spaced lower and upper mezzanine floors between the ground floor and a roof.
  • Each of the mezzanine floors has an open decking for allowing the passage of ambient air, whereby a forced circulation of ambient air is suggested in order to maintain the data centre at acceptable operating temperatures.
  • this described building avoids the use of false or raised flooring by making use of industrial or warehouse space with mezzanine floor constructions, the heat dissipation mechanism is still not optimal, because a vast amount of cooling air has to be forced through the entire building structure, which is difficult to control and which is rather inefficient.
  • the overall building size is limited, because for an efficient cooling, the entire inner volume of the building has to be sufficiently supplied with ambient air flow. Further, this architecture does not support multiple floors with large heating sources like computing racks, because the air temperature would rise more and more towards the upper floors.
  • the referred prior art only supports one floor with rather low power density, for instance implementing network equipment and one floor with computer infrastructure.
  • This invention is to provide a data centre and/or a data centre building structure comprising more efficient and universal cooling mechanisms for computer hardware racks, thus, avoiding the necessity of guiding the cooling air across all racks. Further, the invention aims at optimising energy requirements and costs plus at arranging the computer racks more densely in order to minimize the required length of the network cables and to improve the system's communication capabilities. Compared to usual solutions, this invention is to provide a structure of a data centre building comprising larger, scalable storage capacities and an increased storage volume.
  • the scope of the invention is accomplished by a data centre according to claim 1 , a rack for the computer hardware according to subordinate claim 18 and a method for cooling the structure of a data centre building.
  • the present invention describes the structure of a data centre and/or data centre building comprising at least a first and second floor and/or a first and/or second storey and which is suitable for housing a large number of racks each of which providing space for computer hardware.
  • the storeys and/or floors are designed as a high rack warehouse. Therefore, they and/or the entire data centre building do not necessarily have a floor; design and structure may be floor-free.
  • the usage of this high rack warehouse is particularly space-saving since it is possible to do without floors and, in particular, without double floors. Based on this method, the costs for a data centre building designed according to the invention may be reduced since high rack warehouses are cheaper than normal data centre building structures.
  • the data centre building comprises a first cooling circuit to discharge the heat generated by the computer hardware.
  • This first cooling circuit is designed to provide some of the racks with a coolant, and the first cooling circuit is designed to remove the coolant heated by the computer hardware of at least some racks.
  • the invention is particularly characterized in that the aforementioned racks, which are connected with the first cooling circuit, comprise heat exchangers capable of transferring the entire heat generated by the computer hardware to the coolant.
  • the heat exchangers' dimensions ensure they are capable of removing the entire heat volume generated by the computer hardware. Therewith, it is ensured that no hot air is released to the data centre.
  • the air fed to the racks and the air coming from the racks have the same or even a lower temperature so that it is possible to entirely avoid external, cross-rack air flows. Therefore, it is prevented that the room temperature increases in vertical direction.
  • the heat exchangers may be oversized so that the heat exchangers themselves contribute to cooling the data centre.
  • the present invention is based on a complete rack-specific cooling system within the high rack warehouse and a transport mechanism in order to avoid the problem of how to provide and control a flow of cooling air through the entire building.
  • the first cooling circuit requires little installation room only. Some or even all computer hardware racks are individually connected to the first cooling circuit, which provides an efficient instrument for removing and discharging the heat from the computer hardware.
  • Coupling each rack to be cooled to the cooling circuit individually with the cooling circuit in connection with the rack-specific heat exchangers suitable to remove the entire heat generated by the computer hardware provides the additional advantage that it is possible to control and monitor the cooling power and heat exchange individually and separately for each individual rack within the structure of the data centre. Cooling the hot air exclusively within the rack makes it possible to install any rack package densities without requiring air flow.
  • the first cooling circuit comprises a piping system to remove the coolant.
  • a liquid coolant such as water and other suitable cooling fluids, particularly with larger thermal capacities than air, is advantageous due to numerous reasons.
  • the total heat quantity that may be transferred and transported is, compared to gaseous coolants, larger.
  • the coolant is conveyed within the cooling circuit, which may contain water or any other liquid having a comparably high thermal capacity, with a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure. Based on this, it is guaranteed that not every leakage in the piping system causes immediately loss of coolant escaping from the piping system. Instead, the environmental air would enter into the piping system and, based on this, prevent that sensitive and expensive computer hardware would be damaged by this coolant.
  • the storeys and/or floors of the high rack warehouse do, according to another preferred embodiment, not have a false floor. Based on this, installation space is saved and package density of the computer hardware may be increased.
  • the coolant is conveyed within the cooling circuit, which may contain water or any other liquid having a comparably high thermal capacity, with a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure. Based on this, it is guaranteed that not every leakage in the piping system causes immediately loss of coolant escaping from the piping system. Instead, the environmental air would enter into the piping system and, based on this, prevent that sensitive and expensive computer hardware would be damaged by this coolant.
  • the storeys and/or floors of the high rack warehouse do, according to another preferred embodiment, not have a false floor. Based on this, installation space is saved and package density of the computer hardware may be increased.
  • the heat exchanging means being arranged inside or in direct vicinity of a computer hardware rack are adapted to transfer the entire heat generated inside the rack to the coolant. Therefore, the heat exchanging means of each rack to be cooled provide a heat coupling between the provided coolant and the inner volume of the rack.
  • the entire building structure can be designed in a universal and flexible way.
  • various floors of the building do no longer have to be permeable for ambient air flow.
  • the data centre building structure comprises at least a first and a second storey, which is supported by a steel support structure.
  • a steel support structure may be designed as a high rack warehouse, wherein the steel support structure directly serves as a support for the computer hardware racks. Therefore, floors segments or floor tiles to be arranged between the various computer racks and the steel support structure are no longer required.
  • the racks are directly arranged on double-T beams of the steel support structure.
  • mesh grids or comparable support structures can be arranged in the clearance of adjacently located racks.
  • the mesh grids may serve as a kind of floor segment. Due to their mesh-like design, they allow penetration of a directed air flow. Additionally, depending on the mesh size, those mesh grids can also be optimized with respect to weight.
  • At least some of the racks comprising a heat exchanging unit are adapted to transfer heat between the coolant, which is provided by the piping, and a gaseous heat exchanging medium.
  • the gaseous heat exchanging medium is in thermal contact with the computer hardware components disposed inside the rack.
  • the heated gaseous heat exchanging medium is further in thermal contact with the heat exchanging unit and serves to transfer the accumulated heat to the liquid coolant inside the piping.
  • the heat exchanging means in combination with the liquid coolant are adapted to provide a very effective means to prevent any hot air flow outside the racks. Hot air cannot escape from the inside of the rack to the outside.
  • the heat exchanging means may directly receive the hot air generated by the computer hardware inside the rack and may transform this hot air back down to a desired room temperature by simply conveying the heat to the coolant conveying piping. In this way, any routing of hot air inside the data centre building can be avoided.
  • the distance over which hot or heated air travels can be reduced to a minimum. It is only required to transport the heated air inside the rack, in particular from the computer hardware to the heat exchanging means. In this way, any difficult-to-control turbulent air flow can be prevented. Instead, the invention comes along with a smooth and laminar air flow, which is basically constricted inside the rack.
  • each rack may comprise heat exchanging means having appropriate flanges in order to couple the rack-internal cooling architecture to the first cooling circuit, which is adapted to interconnect various racks among each other and to convey the generated heat to an external reservoir.
  • rack-based heat exchanging means Another advantage of the rack-based heat exchanging means is, that the racks themselves do not have to be kept closed and that the air flow into and out of the racks does no longer have to be controlled. As a further benefit, inside the data centre building, there are no additional air conditioners required, as the cooling function may be completely taken over by the heat exchanging units inside the racks.
  • the heat exchanging means comprise a rather large surface, a relatively low and laminar stream of air can be obtained inside the particular rack, thus allowing to reduce the speed of optional fans and to minimize a corresponding fan power consumption of the cooling.
  • At least some of the racks comprise at least one cooling fan.
  • any of those racks having heat exchanging mean comprise at least one fan, which is either directly coupled to the heat exchanging means or which is disposed in close vicinity to the heat exchanging means in order to provide a sufficient cold air circulation inside the particular rack.
  • those heat exchanging means comprising at least one fan and a heat exchanger, are pair-wise and adjacently arranged.
  • the invention provides a redundancy in case, that one of a pair of heat exchanging means may become subject to malfunction.
  • the heat exchanging means of an adjacently located rack may take over the function of that heat exchanging means, which is subject to failure.
  • the fan speed of the intact heat exchanging means can be individually increased in order to compensate for the system failure of the neighbouring heat exchanger or its fan.
  • At least some of the racks comprise control means for individually regulating the heat exchanging means.
  • the entire system a may adaptively, locally react on local system failures and may automatically initiate respective provisions in order to compensate the failure.
  • control means further comprise leak detectors for the piping and/or the smoke detectors, whereby said detectors are coupled to an emergency system, which is adapted to selectively switch off the hardware and/or the relevant branch of the cooling unit.
  • the emergency system may be designed and arranged in any of said racks individually and separated from an emergency system of neighbouring or adjacent racks.
  • Smoke and leakage detectors may be installed separately and independently from each other in order to individually switch off burning or stewing computer hardware and to be able to maintain all other operations of the data centre.
  • it may also be imaginable to use a combination of individual detectors and/or to use a multi-functional detector.
  • the racks further comprise power scheduling means, that are adapted to keep an overall rush-in electric current below a predefined threshold.
  • This embodiment is adapted to prevent, that the entire data centre draws an amount of energy which cannot be provided by an external power supply. Therefore, the power scheduling means are adapted to regulate, that each rack or a pair of racks draws power from an electric current- or voltage supply according to a given time sheet.
  • a first rack may power-up after a given time-delay compared to any other rack of the data centre.
  • peak-power consumption of the entire data centre building can be kept below a predefined threshold, thus ensuring, that the external power supply does not brake down.
  • the power scheduling means may either be implemented as a specific algorithm assigning a predefined individual, hence different, time-delay to any of the racks of the data centre building.
  • a power switch-on of the various racks is controlled by means of a centralised architecture.
  • an interconnected emergency system is in the scope of the present invention, whereby a multiplicity of leak-and/or smoke detectors are electrically coupled to a central emergency system, which may automatically initiate respective provisions in order to counteract a system failure.
  • the data centre further comprises a second cooling circuit comprising the same principal structure than the first cooling circuit.
  • first and second cooling circuits are alternately arranged in each storey of the data centre building.
  • every second column or row of racks for instance even numbered rows of racks are typically coupled to the first cooling circuit whereas odd numbered columns or rows are coupled to the second cooling circuit.
  • the remaining intact cooling circuit may overtake the entire cooling of all racks of the relevant storey.
  • the compact architecture of the preferred embodiment allows to operate the data center at relatively high ambient temperatures, therefore also rising the temperature of the coolant liquid. Higher temperatures of coolant liquid allow more efficient cooling. In case the coolant temperature approaching 30° C., the heat accumulated from the computer hardware may be used in order to heat other parts of a building, in particular in wintertime without a necessity to make use of heat pumps.
  • the first and/or second cooling circuit are directly coupled to heating means of a separate building or building unit being located in close vicinity of the data centre building structure.
  • heating means of a separate building or building unit being located in close vicinity of the data centre building structure.
  • the cooling circuit can be directly coupled to radiators or comparable heating means of a building or building unit.
  • first and/or second cooling circuit is adapted to be coupled to an external heat reservoir.
  • This heat reservoir can be used as energy buffer, for instance storing the heat accumulated from the computer hardware in winter during the night in order to provide more building heating power during the day. In summer the heat reservoir can be used for storing heat energy during the day, allowing to cool down at night with higher efficiency due to colder ambient temperature.
  • the double-T beams of the support structure e.g. steel support structure may further serve as a guiding and support structure for a lifting device, being adapted transport and to lift entire racks of a storey across the storey plane.
  • a lifting device being adapted transport and to lift entire racks of a storey across the storey plane.
  • the invention refers to a computer hardware rack which may be installed within a high rack warehouse in the above mentioned data centre building.
  • the computer hardware rack contains storage room for computer hardware and at least one heat exchanger unit that can be connected to a cooling circuit conveying cooling liquid.
  • the computer hardware rack comprises control systems that are designed to control the heat exchangers of the rack individually and/or autonomously.
  • the heat exchanger is dimensioned in a way so that the entire heat volume generated by the computer hardware is removed so that the heat is not transferred to the environment of the rack.
  • the invention provides a method for cooling of a data centre building structure that comprises a multiplicity of computer hardware racks, each of which comprising storage space for computer hardware.
  • the method provides an approach to dissipate heat being generated by the computer hardware by the steps of conveying a coolant to at least some of the racks by means of a first cooling circuit and by transferring the heat to the coolant by means of heat exchanging means and by finally conveying the heated coolant away from the racks to a cooling system by making use of heat exchanging means arranged at each rack to be cooled.
  • a cooling system by making use of heat exchanging means arranged at each rack to be cooled.
  • the cooling can be adapted to the cooling requirements of each rack individually.
  • the method of cooling the data centre building is characterised in that the heat exchanging means are separately and/or autonomously regulated.
  • This separate and autonomous regulation of rack-specific heat exchanging- or cooling means allows to implement a multi-storey building structure with an increased packing or storage density which provides a sufficient heat dissipation, which can even exceed a volumetric heat dissipation rate of 2 kW per m 3 .
  • the variety of the building architecture can be enhanced, since the coolant can be conveyed to any location inside the building structure, where heat is generated by means due to computer hardware.
  • FIG. 1 schematically illustrates a data centre building according to the prior art
  • FIG. 2 schematically illustrates a two-storey data centre building structure according to the present invention.
  • the supporting structure of the computer hardware 101 is designed as a high rack warehouse, which comprises regularly arranged T-beams 203 , preferably comprising steel.
  • the horizontal distance of adjacent steel T-beams is adapted to the size and geometry of the racks 202 providing storage space for the computer hardware 101 .
  • the high rack warehouse has several floors 220 , 221 in which the computer hardware 101 is located in racks 202 .
  • the distance of pairs of steel T-beams corresponds to the horizontal elongation of the racks 202 .
  • the racks 202 can be directly mounted onto the steel T-beams.
  • the distance between pairs of steel T-beams may differ.
  • a clearance 204 between adjacently disposed racks 202 may differ to a clearance 224 .
  • the clearances 204 , 224 are typically covered with mesh grid elements, allowing for a penetration of cooling air in the vertical direction.
  • any of the racks 202 comprises a separate heat exchanging unit 206 , which is equipped with a heat exchanger and with at least one fan 207 in order to facilitate the cooling air flow inside the rack 202 .
  • the heat exchanging units 206 are all coupled to a piping 205 conveying a liquid coolant, e. g. water, to any of the racks 202 .
  • heat exchanging units 206 and appropriate fans 207 of pair-wise adjacently disposed racks 202 within one row are designed to provide a redundancy in case, that one of the heat exchanging units 206 or appropriate fans 207 becomes subject to malfunction.
  • the heat exchanging unit 206 and the fans 207 of a neighbouring and adjacently arranged rack 202 may take over the cooling function of the dropped out heat exchanging unit.
  • the coolant supplied by means of a piping 205 is beneficial in that the various racks 202 no longer have to be designed as closed racks. Moreover, heat dissipation outside the various racks 202 can be effectively reduced to a minimum. Hence, it is no longer necessary to control a global air stream inside the building structure. In this way generation of hot spots which might be due to some turbulent hot air flow outside the racks 202 can be effectively eliminated.
  • the airflow throughout the data centre building structure does no longer have to be actively controlled, since the ambient temperature around the racks 202 is kept on a relatively could level compared to the temperature inside the racks 202 .
  • the racks 202 can be operated in an even/old fashion, where every second rack is coupled to the same piping, namely either the first or second cooling circuit. In this way, two redundant cooling circuits can be maintained providing a residual cooling capacity.
  • the air pumping capacity of the heat exchanger fans 207 is preferably over dimensioned, which allows to compensate the loss of one fan by running the other intact fans of the same or neighbouring rack 202 at an appropriate higher speed.
  • a particular rack can be selectively decoupled from the piping system 205 .
  • Such a decoupled rack 202 may be cooled byusing the adjacently disposed neighbouring racks as a kind of substitute cooling means, which may be operated at a higher fan speed. Even if an entire cooling system fails, the second set of racks 202 , being coupled to the second cooling circuit, will take over the cooling of the next neighbours equivalently by operating its fans at an appropriate higher or even at maximum speed. In this way, the intact heat exchanging means and their cooling fans may ingest the hot air from their respective neighbours. However, if for instance the cooling capacity may not be sufficient any longer, also the temperature of the coolant may be lowered, thus immediately providing a higher cooling efficiency.
  • the computer hardware racks 202 can be mounted and disposed in any arbitrary arrangement, in particular by making use of the third dimension.
  • the racks 202 are mounted side by side and they are typically arranged in rows, facing front to front and back to back for optimal usage of the available space.
  • the coolant supply for each individual rack 202 is in particularly beneficial, since it allows a multi-storey steel structure for computer hardware racks.
  • an upper limit of cooling capacity is rapidly reached, as soon as the data centre building structure has more than 2 storeys.
  • the purely air-flow based cooling becomes more and more inefficient with an increasing building size, in particular building with increasing building height.
  • the clear height required above the racks can be kept at a rather low limit, for instance, at about 50 cm, leading to storey height of 2.5 m, when racks of 2 m height are implemented.
  • the steel support structure 203 not only carries the racks 202 , but also low cost grid floor elements 201 , which are adapted to support maintenance work in such a high rise rack storey architecture.
  • the entire building structure may comprise a steel grid, which can be built at very low costs from standard building blocks. Different row pitches and storey heights can be accumulated and/or adopted if required, simply by moving the standard size T-beams 203 .
  • the open floor structure 201 may additionally support air 208 flow between the various storeys.
  • the steel bars implement standard mounting for the cooling water piping 205 and appropriate cable trays for the cabling 209 , 210 .
  • a standard longitudinal cable tray 209 is mounted by direct attachment to the T-Bars as sketched in FIG. 2 .
  • Transversal cable trays 210 are inserted, implementing a cable tray grid with an adjustable pitch. They are also attached to the T-bars like the trays 201 .
  • the connection to the longitudinal cable trays 209 is provided by appropriate holes in the castellated T-beams.
  • the bottom part of the T-bars carrying the racks can be used to support a moveable hook with an attached hoist 212 , 213 , implementing a low-cost moveable crane, supporting the installation of heavy equipment.
  • the air flow in the racks can be optimised, implementing a low temperature difference between the hot spots inside the computer and the ambient temperature. Assuming a state of the art temperature difference of less than 20° C. between the ambient air and the hot spots inside the rack 202 , an air temperature of 40° C. is conceivable, allowing the heat exchangers to operate at 30° C. with a 10° C. temperature difference for cooling the air.
  • Rising the ambient temperature in the data centre therefore rises the cooling water temperature, which directly increases the cooling efficiency of the heated cooling water.
  • the low cost floor space in the data centre allows the usage of larger enclosures, such as 3U 19′′ systems or blade systems, using large fans and moving larger amounts of air at lower speed.
  • the fans 207 may assist this air flow, supporting to reduce the fan speed inside the computers further.
  • the fan speed in the heat exchanger is optimised according to the needs of the specific equipment in the rack.
  • the consumed power is measured by detecting the primary currents into the computer, defining the dissipated heat.
  • the measured ambient air temperature and the heat exchanger's temperature define the required air flow for cooling and therefore the fan speed.
  • the ambient temperature at the top and rear side of the rack is measured. In case of insufficient air flow through the heat exchanger, this temperature will increase due to hot air leaving the rack. Therefore, the performance of the cooling system is verified independently in every rack.
  • An operating temperature of 30° C. allows the direct use of the cooling water to heat nearby located office buildings, provided they implement floor and wall heating. In summer, the data centre's heat can be used to cool buildings, using convection coolers.
  • the energy of the cooling water can be stored at night in a latent heat reservoir, where the office buildings require much less heating. During the day the equivalent larger amount of heat is available for heating, matching the constant walk heat generation in the data centre with the duty cycle of the office building.
  • latent heat store Another utility of the latent heat store is used in summer during peak temperatures. During this time not all heat may be useable and may have to be conveyed away. Since the cooling efficiency drops with increasing outside temperature, the heat reservoir is used here during the day to store the heat and to dissipate the amount of heat during night time, when the outside temperature is significantly lower.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Architecture (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Cooling Or The Like Of Electrical Apparatus (AREA)
  • Ventilation (AREA)

Abstract

The invention relates to a structure of a multi-storey computer centre building which is suitable for accommodating a multiplicity of racks (202), each of which comprises storage space for computer hardware (101), wherein the building has a first cooling circuit (205) in order to dissipate heat generated by the computer hardware (101), wherein the first cooling circuit (205) is designed to supply at least some of the racks (202) with a coolant and the first cooling circuit is also designed to remove the heated coolant from at least some of the racks (201), wherein said racks (202) have heat exchanger devices (206, 207) which are suitable for transferring the generated heat to the coolant.

Description

  • The present invention relates to a data centre building structure, which is adapted to house a multiplicity of racks being designed to provide storage space for computer hardware. The data centre building is equipped with cooling means in order to provide dissipation of heat being generated by the computer hardware.
  • BACKGROUND AND PRIOR ART
  • In the prior art, there exist various data building structures for housing a multiplicity of racks, each of which comprising storage space for computer hardware. For instance, a conventional data centre building according to the prior art is sketched in FIG. 1. It comprises a false floor for a computer infrastructure, which is typically housed in 19″ rack enclosures. The cooling is accomplished by cold air, which is pumped into the false floors having holes at the appropriate locations in front of the racks. In this way cold air is supplied at the air intakes of the computer racks.
  • Referring to FIG. 1, the floor 106 carries the false floor, assembled from vertical steel bars 107, carrying the floor tiles 104, 105, which in turn carry the computer infrastructure, for instance 19″ racks 102. These racks 102 typically host 19″ rack mounted computer infrastructure 101, which is horizontally mounted and acquires air at the front-side of the rack and produces warm air at the back side. In order to cool the computers, the false floor tiles have appropriate air holes 104, such that cold air 110 can be ingested into the racks 102.
  • In the prior art also an encapsulated cold air isle 103 is provided in order to avoid, that hot air 109 short circuits the flow of cold air. By means of such an encapsulation, the provided cold air 110, 111 may only leave the isle 103 via the computers' air intake and correspondingly there is no other way for the heated air to enter this space.
  • This design is somehow disadvantageous, because the single racks 102 have to be designed as closed racks. Further, the air flow through respective racks 102 has to be surveyed and controlled in order to avoid pumping unnecessary amounts of cold air from the cold aisle. There exist various concepts, providing a regulation of the air flow into the cold isle 102, such that the fans providing the air flow 108 operate at the lowest possible power. The hot air 109 generated at the back of the rack 102 is fed back to not explicitly illustrated heat exchangers being located somewhere else in the data centre building. The heated air is either cooled down again or fresh air is used in order to provide a stream of cold air 108.
  • This architecture has various disadvantages. First of all, the comparably small heat capacity of air requires rather high temperature differences between the cold air and the heated air. Further, a high air flow rate with corresponding large losses due to air pumping is also required. Reasonable limits of the air flow rate and the air temperature limit the overall size of the data centre building. Further, an air cooling system typically requires 40% of cooling overheat. Moreover, the false floor architecture is quite expensive and wastes volume inside the building.
  • Document WO 02/052107 A2 further discloses a data centre building comprising a ground floor and spaced lower and upper mezzanine floors between the ground floor and a roof. Each of the mezzanine floors has an open decking for allowing the passage of ambient air, whereby a forced circulation of ambient air is suggested in order to maintain the data centre at acceptable operating temperatures. Even though this described building avoids the use of false or raised flooring by making use of industrial or warehouse space with mezzanine floor constructions, the heat dissipation mechanism is still not optimal, because a vast amount of cooling air has to be forced through the entire building structure, which is difficult to control and which is rather inefficient.
  • Also here, the overall building size is limited, because for an efficient cooling, the entire inner volume of the building has to be sufficiently supplied with ambient air flow. Further, this architecture does not support multiple floors with large heating sources like computing racks, because the air temperature would rise more and more towards the upper floors. The referred prior art only supports one floor with rather low power density, for instance implementing network equipment and one floor with computer infrastructure.
  • SCOPE
  • This invention is to provide a data centre and/or a data centre building structure comprising more efficient and universal cooling mechanisms for computer hardware racks, thus, avoiding the necessity of guiding the cooling air across all racks. Further, the invention aims at optimising energy requirements and costs plus at arranging the computer racks more densely in order to minimize the required length of the network cables and to improve the system's communication capabilities. Compared to usual solutions, this invention is to provide a structure of a data centre building comprising larger, scalable storage capacities and an increased storage volume.
  • DESCRIPTION
  • The scope of the invention is accomplished by a data centre according to claim 1, a rack for the computer hardware according to subordinate claim 18 and a method for cooling the structure of a data centre building.
  • Pursuant to a first aspect, the present invention describes the structure of a data centre and/or data centre building comprising at least a first and second floor and/or a first and/or second storey and which is suitable for housing a large number of racks each of which providing space for computer hardware.
  • The storeys and/or floors are designed as a high rack warehouse. Therefore, they and/or the entire data centre building do not necessarily have a floor; design and structure may be floor-free. The usage of this high rack warehouse is particularly space-saving since it is possible to do without floors and, in particular, without double floors. Based on this method, the costs for a data centre building designed according to the invention may be reduced since high rack warehouses are cheaper than normal data centre building structures.
  • Additionally, the data centre building comprises a first cooling circuit to discharge the heat generated by the computer hardware. This first cooling circuit is designed to provide some of the racks with a coolant, and the first cooling circuit is designed to remove the coolant heated by the computer hardware of at least some racks.
  • The invention is particularly characterized in that the aforementioned racks, which are connected with the first cooling circuit, comprise heat exchangers capable of transferring the entire heat generated by the computer hardware to the coolant. According to the invention, the heat exchangers' dimensions ensure they are capable of removing the entire heat volume generated by the computer hardware. Therewith, it is ensured that no hot air is released to the data centre. The air fed to the racks and the air coming from the racks have the same or even a lower temperature so that it is possible to entirely avoid external, cross-rack air flows. Therefore, it is prevented that the room temperature increases in vertical direction.
  • In particular, the heat exchangers may be oversized so that the heat exchangers themselves contribute to cooling the data centre.
  • Therefore, the present invention is based on a complete rack-specific cooling system within the high rack warehouse and a transport mechanism in order to avoid the problem of how to provide and control a flow of cooling air through the entire building. Instead, the first cooling circuit requires little installation room only. Some or even all computer hardware racks are individually connected to the first cooling circuit, which provides an efficient instrument for removing and discharging the heat from the computer hardware.
  • Coupling each rack to be cooled to the cooling circuit individually with the cooling circuit in connection with the rack-specific heat exchangers suitable to remove the entire heat generated by the computer hardware provides the additional advantage that it is possible to control and monitor the cooling power and heat exchange individually and separately for each individual rack within the structure of the data centre. Cooling the hot air exclusively within the rack makes it possible to install any rack package densities without requiring air flow.
  • Based on this individual and separate cooling infrastructure it is possible to arrange the racks within a high rack warehouse/multi-storey structure since the entire environmental temperature of the building can be maintained in a well defined, and rather low temperature range. Beyond that, the cooling system proposed allows using a so-called open rack architecture ensuring the racks do not need to be hermetically sealed anymore.
  • According to a first preferred embodiment of the invention, the first cooling circuit comprises a piping system to remove the coolant. Usage of a liquid coolant such as water and other suitable cooling fluids, particularly with larger thermal capacities than air, is advantageous due to numerous reasons. At first, the total heat quantity that may be transferred and transported is, compared to gaseous coolants, larger. Secondly, it is possible to control and monitor the flow and the transmission of the coolant more easily, compared to a turbulent and laminar flow of a gaseous coolant.
  • Beyond that, it is recommended that the coolant is conveyed within the cooling circuit, which may contain water or any other liquid having a comparably high thermal capacity, with a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure. Based on this, it is guaranteed that not every leakage in the piping system causes immediately loss of coolant escaping from the piping system. Instead, the environmental air would enter into the piping system and, based on this, prevent that sensitive and expensive computer hardware would be damaged by this coolant.
  • The storeys and/or floors of the high rack warehouse do, according to another preferred embodiment, not have a false floor. Based on this, installation space is saved and package density of the computer hardware may be increased.
  • Beyond that, it is recommended that the coolant is conveyed within the cooling circuit, which may contain water or any other liquid having a comparably high thermal capacity, with a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure. Based on this, it is guaranteed that not every leakage in the piping system causes immediately loss of coolant escaping from the piping system. Instead, the environmental air would enter into the piping system and, based on this, prevent that sensitive and expensive computer hardware would be damaged by this coolant.
  • The storeys and/or floors of the high rack warehouse do, according to another preferred embodiment, not have a false floor. Based on this, installation space is saved and package density of the computer hardware may be increased.
  • Further, it is possible to reduce the difference in temperature between the coolant supply and the computer hardware rack which is to be cooled to a minimum using an efficient insulation means within the piping system, whereby it is simultaneously possible to remove the heated coolant from the building or feed it to a heat or cooling reservoir without heating the building itself unintentionally.
  • The heat exchanging means being arranged inside or in direct vicinity of a computer hardware rack are adapted to transfer the entire heat generated inside the rack to the coolant. Therefore, the heat exchanging means of each rack to be cooled provide a heat coupling between the provided coolant and the inner volume of the rack.
  • By means of the liquid coolant supplying piping, the entire building structure can be designed in a universal and flexible way. Hence, in contrast to prior art solutions, various floors of the building do no longer have to be permeable for ambient air flow. Also, there is no longer a need to provide encapsulated cold air isles and additionally, it is no longer required to control a difficult-to-handle global flow of cooling air inside a data centre building.
  • According to a further preferred embodiment, the data centre building structure comprises at least a first and a second storey, which is supported by a steel support structure. Additionally, three or even more storeys arranged on top of each other are conceivable and are in the scope of the present invention. In particular, the steel support structure may be designed as a high rack warehouse, wherein the steel support structure directly serves as a support for the computer hardware racks. Therefore, floors segments or floor tiles to be arranged between the various computer racks and the steel support structure are no longer required.
  • According to a further preferred embodiment, the racks are directly arranged on double-T beams of the steel support structure. Further, mesh grids or comparable support structures can be arranged in the clearance of adjacently located racks. Here, the mesh grids may serve as a kind of floor segment. Due to their mesh-like design, they allow penetration of a directed air flow. Additionally, depending on the mesh size, those mesh grids can also be optimized with respect to weight.
  • According to a further preferred embodiment, at least some of the racks comprising a heat exchanging unit are adapted to transfer heat between the coolant, which is provided by the piping, and a gaseous heat exchanging medium. Here, it is intended, that the gaseous heat exchanging medium is in thermal contact with the computer hardware components disposed inside the rack. The heated gaseous heat exchanging medium is further in thermal contact with the heat exchanging unit and serves to transfer the accumulated heat to the liquid coolant inside the piping.
  • In this way, the flow of a gaseous cooling medium can be reduced to a confined space, in particular inside the respective rack. Hence, the heat exchanging means in combination with the liquid coolant are adapted to provide a very effective means to prevent any hot air flow outside the racks. Hot air cannot escape from the inside of the rack to the outside.
  • Furthermore, the heat exchanging means may directly receive the hot air generated by the computer hardware inside the rack and may transform this hot air back down to a desired room temperature by simply conveying the heat to the coolant conveying piping. In this way, any routing of hot air inside the data centre building can be avoided.
  • Also, the distance over which hot or heated air travels can be reduced to a minimum. It is only required to transport the heated air inside the rack, in particular from the computer hardware to the heat exchanging means. In this way, any difficult-to-control turbulent air flow can be prevented. Instead, the invention comes along with a smooth and laminar air flow, which is basically constricted inside the rack.
  • Even though, a heat exchange between a liquid coolant and a gaseous heat exchanging medium is an easy and straight forward approach on how to provide efficient and effective cooling, it is also in the scope of the present invention, that the heat exchanging medium used inside the rack is also liquid instead of gaseous. Hence, each rack may comprise heat exchanging means having appropriate flanges in order to couple the rack-internal cooling architecture to the first cooling circuit, which is adapted to interconnect various racks among each other and to convey the generated heat to an external reservoir.
  • Another advantage of the rack-based heat exchanging means is, that the racks themselves do not have to be kept closed and that the air flow into and out of the racks does no longer have to be controlled. As a further benefit, inside the data centre building, there are no additional air conditioners required, as the cooling function may be completely taken over by the heat exchanging units inside the racks.
  • In particular, since the heat exchanging means comprise a rather large surface, a relatively low and laminar stream of air can be obtained inside the particular rack, thus allowing to reduce the speed of optional fans and to minimize a corresponding fan power consumption of the cooling.
  • According to a further preferred embodiment, at least some of the racks comprise at least one cooling fan. Preferably, any of those racks having heat exchanging mean comprise at least one fan, which is either directly coupled to the heat exchanging means or which is disposed in close vicinity to the heat exchanging means in order to provide a sufficient cold air circulation inside the particular rack.
  • According to another embodiment of the invention, those heat exchanging means comprising at least one fan and a heat exchanger, are pair-wise and adjacently arranged. In this way, the invention provides a redundancy in case, that one of a pair of heat exchanging means may become subject to malfunction. In such a case, the heat exchanging means of an adjacently located rack may take over the function of that heat exchanging means, which is subject to failure. Further, the fan speed of the intact heat exchanging means can be individually increased in order to compensate for the system failure of the neighbouring heat exchanger or its fan.
  • Therefore, it is of advance, that at least some of the racks comprise control means for individually regulating the heat exchanging means. In this way, the entire system a may adaptively, locally react on local system failures and may automatically initiate respective provisions in order to compensate the failure.
  • According to another embodiment, the control means further comprise leak detectors for the piping and/or the smoke detectors, whereby said detectors are coupled to an emergency system, which is adapted to selectively switch off the hardware and/or the relevant branch of the cooling unit.
  • The emergency system may be designed and arranged in any of said racks individually and separated from an emergency system of neighbouring or adjacent racks. Smoke and leakage detectors may be installed separately and independently from each other in order to individually switch off burning or stewing computer hardware and to be able to maintain all other operations of the data centre. Alternatively, it may also be imaginable to use a combination of individual detectors and/or to use a multi-functional detector.
  • According to a further embodiment, the racks further comprise power scheduling means, that are adapted to keep an overall rush-in electric current below a predefined threshold. This embodiment is adapted to prevent, that the entire data centre draws an amount of energy which cannot be provided by an external power supply. Therefore, the power scheduling means are adapted to regulate, that each rack or a pair of racks draws power from an electric current- or voltage supply according to a given time sheet.
  • For instance, a first rack may power-up after a given time-delay compared to any other rack of the data centre. In this way, peak-power consumption of the entire data centre building can be kept below a predefined threshold, thus ensuring, that the external power supply does not brake down. The power scheduling means may either be implemented as a specific algorithm assigning a predefined individual, hence different, time-delay to any of the racks of the data centre building.
  • Alternatively, it is also conceivable, that a power switch-on of the various racks is controlled by means of a centralised architecture. However, also an interconnected emergency system is in the scope of the present invention, whereby a multiplicity of leak-and/or smoke detectors are electrically coupled to a central emergency system, which may automatically initiate respective provisions in order to counteract a system failure.
  • According to another preferred embodiment, the data centre further comprises a second cooling circuit comprising the same principal structure than the first cooling circuit. However, first and second cooling circuits are alternately arranged in each storey of the data centre building. In particular, if the racks in each storey are disposed in a row-or column-wise arrangement, every second column or row of racks, for instance even numbered rows of racks are typically coupled to the first cooling circuit whereas odd numbered columns or rows are coupled to the second cooling circuit. In this way, even in case that the first or second cooling circuit may become subject to a malfunction, the remaining intact cooling circuit may overtake the entire cooling of all racks of the relevant storey.
  • The compact architecture of the preferred embodiment allows to operate the data center at relatively high ambient temperatures, therefore also rising the temperature of the coolant liquid. Higher temperatures of coolant liquid allow more efficient cooling. In case the coolant temperature approaching 30° C., the heat accumulated from the computer hardware may be used in order to heat other parts of a building, in particular in wintertime without a necessity to make use of heat pumps.
  • According to another aspect, the first and/or second cooling circuit are directly coupled to heating means of a separate building or building unit being located in close vicinity of the data centre building structure. By making use of a heated coolant temperature of around 30° C., surrounding buildings or building units can be directly heated by means of the heated coolant without the necessity of making use of additional devices, such as e.g. heat pumps. In particular, the cooling circuit can be directly coupled to radiators or comparable heating means of a building or building unit.
  • Furthermore, the first and/or second cooling circuit is adapted to be coupled to an external heat reservoir. This heat reservoir can be used as energy buffer, for instance storing the heat accumulated from the computer hardware in winter during the night in order to provide more building heating power during the day. In summer the heat reservoir can be used for storing heat energy during the day, allowing to cool down at night with higher efficiency due to colder ambient temperature.
  • According to a further embodiment, the double-T beams of the support structure, e.g. steel support structure may further serve as a guiding and support structure for a lifting device, being adapted transport and to lift entire racks of a storey across the storey plane. In this way, configuration and reconfiguration of the entire data centre building can be facilitated without the necessity to provide any floor structure for transporting of the computer hardware racks.
  • In another and independent aspect, the invention refers to a computer hardware rack which may be installed within a high rack warehouse in the above mentioned data centre building. The computer hardware rack contains storage room for computer hardware and at least one heat exchanger unit that can be connected to a cooling circuit conveying cooling liquid. Beyond that, the computer hardware rack comprises control systems that are designed to control the heat exchangers of the rack individually and/or autonomously.
  • The heat exchanger is dimensioned in a way so that the entire heat volume generated by the computer hardware is removed so that the heat is not transferred to the environment of the rack.
  • In still another aspect, the invention provides a method for cooling of a data centre building structure that comprises a multiplicity of computer hardware racks, each of which comprising storage space for computer hardware. The method provides an approach to dissipate heat being generated by the computer hardware by the steps of conveying a coolant to at least some of the racks by means of a first cooling circuit and by transferring the heat to the coolant by means of heat exchanging means and by finally conveying the heated coolant away from the racks to a cooling system by making use of heat exchanging means arranged at each rack to be cooled. In this way an individual and separate rack-wise cooling of a data centre building can be provided. Also, the cooling can be adapted to the cooling requirements of each rack individually.
  • Furthermore, the method of cooling the data centre building is characterised in that the heat exchanging means are separately and/or autonomously regulated. This separate and autonomous regulation of rack-specific heat exchanging- or cooling means allows to implement a multi-storey building structure with an increased packing or storage density which provides a sufficient heat dissipation, which can even exceed a volumetric heat dissipation rate of 2 kW per m3.
  • By means of making use of a cooling circuit being adapted to convey a liquid coolant, the variety of the building architecture can be enhanced, since the coolant can be conveyed to any location inside the building structure, where heat is generated by means due to computer hardware.
  • EMBODIMENT
  • In the following, preferred embodiments of the invention will be described in detail by making reference to the drawings in which:
  • FIG. 1 schematically illustrates a data centre building according to the prior art and
  • FIG. 2 schematically illustrates a two-storey data centre building structure according to the present invention.
  • In FIG. 2, two-storeys of the data centre building structure are disclosed. The supporting structure of the computer hardware 101 is designed as a high rack warehouse, which comprises regularly arranged T-beams 203, preferably comprising steel. The horizontal distance of adjacent steel T-beams is adapted to the size and geometry of the racks 202 providing storage space for the computer hardware 101. The high rack warehouse has several floors 220, 221 in which the computer hardware 101 is located in racks 202.
  • For instance, the distance of pairs of steel T-beams corresponds to the horizontal elongation of the racks 202. In this way, the racks 202 can be directly mounted onto the steel T-beams. However, the distance between pairs of steel T-beams may differ. In the illustration of FIG. 2, a clearance 204 between adjacently disposed racks 202 may differ to a clearance 224. However, although not critically required, the clearances 204, 224 are typically covered with mesh grid elements, allowing for a penetration of cooling air in the vertical direction.
  • In the illustrated embodiment of FIG. 2, any of the racks 202 comprises a separate heat exchanging unit 206, which is equipped with a heat exchanger and with at least one fan 207 in order to facilitate the cooling air flow inside the rack 202. The heat exchanging units 206 are all coupled to a piping 205 conveying a liquid coolant, e. g. water, to any of the racks 202. Additionally, heat exchanging units 206 and appropriate fans 207 of pair-wise adjacently disposed racks 202 within one row are designed to provide a redundancy in case, that one of the heat exchanging units 206 or appropriate fans 207 becomes subject to malfunction.
  • In such cases, the heat exchanging unit 206 and the fans 207 of a neighbouring and adjacently arranged rack 202 may take over the cooling function of the dropped out heat exchanging unit.
  • The coolant supplied by means of a piping 205 is beneficial in that the various racks 202 no longer have to be designed as closed racks. Moreover, heat dissipation outside the various racks 202 can be effectively reduced to a minimum. Hence, it is no longer necessary to control a global air stream inside the building structure. In this way generation of hot spots which might be due to some turbulent hot air flow outside the racks 202 can be effectively eliminated.
  • Additionally, the airflow throughout the data centre building structure does no longer have to be actively controlled, since the ambient temperature around the racks 202 is kept on a relatively could level compared to the temperature inside the racks 202.
  • In order to implement failure tolerance on the cooling infrastructure, the racks 202 can be operated in an even/old fashion, where every second rack is coupled to the same piping, namely either the first or second cooling circuit. In this way, two redundant cooling circuits can be maintained providing a residual cooling capacity. The air pumping capacity of the heat exchanger fans 207 is preferably over dimensioned, which allows to compensate the loss of one fan by running the other intact fans of the same or neighbouring rack 202 at an appropriate higher speed.
  • In case of a failure, for instance due to a leak in the piping 205, a particular rack can be selectively decoupled from the piping system 205. Such a decoupled rack 202 may be cooled byusing the adjacently disposed neighbouring racks as a kind of substitute cooling means, which may be operated at a higher fan speed. Even if an entire cooling system fails, the second set of racks 202, being coupled to the second cooling circuit, will take over the cooling of the next neighbours equivalently by operating its fans at an appropriate higher or even at maximum speed. In this way, the intact heat exchanging means and their cooling fans may ingest the hot air from their respective neighbours. However, if for instance the cooling capacity may not be sufficient any longer, also the temperature of the coolant may be lowered, thus immediately providing a higher cooling efficiency.
  • Since there is no requirement to guide any air throughout the data centre building structure, the computer hardware racks 202 can be mounted and disposed in any arbitrary arrangement, in particular by making use of the third dimension. In the embodiment as illustrated in FIG. 2, the racks 202 are mounted side by side and they are typically arranged in rows, facing front to front and back to back for optimal usage of the available space.
  • Other embodiments are imaginable, whereby the racks are arranged with front side to rear side so that the next row absorbs the air directly from the heat exchangers of the previous row. However, this scenario needs a bit more space since the distances between the rows of the racks 202 must not be smaller than the length of a rack drawer, e.g. a drawer of 19 inch.
  • The coolant supply for each individual rack 202 is in particularly beneficial, since it allows a multi-storey steel structure for computer hardware racks. In contrast, with conventional air-flow based cooling systems, an upper limit of cooling capacity is rapidly reached, as soon as the data centre building structure has more than 2 storeys. Moreover, the purely air-flow based cooling becomes more and more inefficient with an increasing building size, in particular building with increasing building height.
  • As further sketched in FIG. 2, the clear height required above the racks can be kept at a rather low limit, for instance, at about 50 cm, leading to storey height of 2.5 m, when racks of 2 m height are implemented. The steel support structure 203 not only carries the racks 202, but also low cost grid floor elements 201, which are adapted to support maintenance work in such a high rise rack storey architecture. As a result, the entire building structure may comprise a steel grid, which can be built at very low costs from standard building blocks. Different row pitches and storey heights can be accumulated and/or adopted if required, simply by moving the standard size T-beams 203. The open floor structure 201 may additionally support air 208 flow between the various storeys.
  • The steel bars implement standard mounting for the cooling water piping 205 and appropriate cable trays for the cabling 209, 210. Below every rack row a standard longitudinal cable tray 209 is mounted by direct attachment to the T-Bars as sketched in FIG. 2. Transversal cable trays 210 are inserted, implementing a cable tray grid with an adjustable pitch. They are also attached to the T-bars like the trays 201. The connection to the longitudinal cable trays 209 is provided by appropriate holes in the castellated T-beams.
  • Vertical cabling is easily afforded between the racks top and/or bottom or by implementing vertical cable trays in spare locations. This architecture makes the ceiling of story n to the false floor of story n+1. The implementation of the computer hardware in multiple storeys results in the shortest average cabling distance for any given system, as this parameter rises only with the third root of the systems' volume. The rather open architecture allows the implementation of the shortest possible cable paths between any two locations and therefore the shortest latencies between the nodes.
  • The bottom part of the T-bars carrying the racks can be used to support a moveable hook with an attached hoist 212, 213, implementing a low-cost moveable crane, supporting the installation of heavy equipment.
  • The air flow in the racks can be optimised, implementing a low temperature difference between the hot spots inside the computer and the ambient temperature. Assuming a state of the art temperature difference of less than 20° C. between the ambient air and the hot spots inside the rack 202, an air temperature of 40° C. is conceivable, allowing the heat exchangers to operate at 30° C. with a 10° C. temperature difference for cooling the air.
  • Rising the ambient temperature in the data centre therefore rises the cooling water temperature, which directly increases the cooling efficiency of the heated cooling water. The low cost floor space in the data centre allows the usage of larger enclosures, such as 3U 19″ systems or blade systems, using large fans and moving larger amounts of air at lower speed. The fans 207 may assist this air flow, supporting to reduce the fan speed inside the computers further.
  • The fan speed in the heat exchanger is optimised according to the needs of the specific equipment in the rack. On one hand the consumed power is measured by detecting the primary currents into the computer, defining the dissipated heat. The measured ambient air temperature and the heat exchanger's temperature define the required air flow for cooling and therefore the fan speed.
  • On the other hand the ambient temperature at the top and rear side of the rack is measured. In case of insufficient air flow through the heat exchanger, this temperature will increase due to hot air leaving the rack. Therefore, the performance of the cooling system is verified independently in every rack.
  • In operation mode, all air leaving the computers of a rack flows through the appropriate heat exchanger. Therefore, it is possible to detect overheating inside the rack by detecting smoke in the airflow. In case of such a failure, the primary power to the computers in the rack can be cut after attempting an emergency shutdown of the machines in the rack. Normal computers do not present a significant fire load and therefore the disconnecting of the primary power will stop critical rise or escalation of the problem. Having control over the primary power in a rack allows to schedule the power-on event, in order to limit the rush-in currents. In the preferred embodiment of the invention the individual racks negotiate a schedule for the powering-up of the computers.
  • An operating temperature of 30° C. allows the direct use of the cooling water to heat nearby located office buildings, provided they implement floor and wall heating. In summer, the data centre's heat can be used to cool buildings, using convection coolers.
  • The energy of the cooling water can be stored at night in a latent heat reservoir, where the office buildings require much less heating. During the day the equivalent larger amount of heat is available for heating, matching the constant walk heat generation in the data centre with the duty cycle of the office building.
  • Another utility of the latent heat store is used in summer during peak temperatures. During this time not all heat may be useable and may have to be conveyed away. Since the cooling efficiency drops with increasing outside temperature, the heat reservoir is used here during the day to store the heat and to dissipate the amount of heat during night time, when the outside temperature is significantly lower.
  • REFERENCE LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERAL
    • 101 computer hardware
    • 102 rack
    • 103 cold isle
    • 104 open floor tyle
    • 105 closed floor tyle
    • 106 ground floor
    • 107 false floor T-beam
    • 108 cold air flow
    • 110 air flow
    • 111 air flow
    • 112 false floor
    • 201 grid floor
    • 203 steel T-beam
    • 204 clearance
    • 205 piping system
    • 206 heat exchanging unit
    • 207 fan
    • 208 air flow
    • 209 longitudinal cable tray
    • 210 lateral cable tray
    • 212 crane
    • 213 crane
    • 220 storey n 222 storey n+1
    • 224 clearance

Claims (22)

1.-19. (canceled)
20. A multi-storey data centre building structure comprising:
at least a first and second storey, wherein the at least first and second storeys are configured to house a multiplicity of racks, each of the multiplicity of racks comprising storage space for computer hardware;
a first cooling circuit for dissipating heat generated by the computer hardware, wherein the first cooling circuit is configured to supply at least some of the racks with a coolant, and wherein the first cooling circuit is further configured to convey a computer hardware heated coolant away from at least one of the multiplicity of racks, wherein said at least one of the multiplicity of racks comprise heat exchanging means configured to transfer a generated heat to the coolant.
21. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the coolant is transported within the first cooling circuit with a pressure lower than atmospheric pressure.
22. The data centre according to claim 21, wherein the first cooling circuit is designed as a vacuum system.
23. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the at least first and second storeys do not have false floors.
24. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the at least first and second storeys are supported by a supporting structure.
25. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the multiplicity of racks are directly arranged at double T-beams of a supporting structure and wherein grid floors are arranged within the spacing between adjacent racks.
26. The data centre according to claim 25, wherein the supporting structure is a steel beam structure.
27. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the at least one of the multiplicity of racks comprise heat exchangers designed to transfer heat between the coolant and a gaseous heat exchange medium.
28. The data centre according to claim 27, wherein the heat exchangers and/or fans of adjacent racks installed in pairs are facing each other with their front sides.
29. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein at least one of the multiplicity of racks are provided with control systems to individually control the heat exchangers.
30. The data centre according to claim 29, wherein the control systems comprise a leakage detector for a piping system, wherein said leakage detector is coupled to an emergency system being configured to selectively switch off the computer hardware and/or the first cooling circuit.
31. The data centre according to claim 29, wherein the control systems comprise a smoke detector, wherein said smoke detector is coupled to an emergency system being configured to selectively switch off the computer hardware and/or the first cooling circuit.
32. The data centre according to claim 30, wherein the control systems are configured to switch off the computer hardware for each rack individually.
33. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the at least one of the multiplicity of racks further comprise a system for switching on electricity suitable to maintain an electrical starting current below a predefined limit.
34. The data centre according to claim 20, further comprising a second cooling circuit, the second cooling circuit having the same structure as the first cooling circuit, wherein the sections of piping systems of the first and second cooling circuits are alternately arranged in each row of racks.
35. The data centre according to claim 25, wherein the double T-beams are used as guiding and supporting structure for a lifting device
36. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the first and/or a second cooling circuit is coupled to an external heat reservoir.
37. The data centre according to claim 20, wherein the first and/or a second cooling circuit is coupled directly with a heating system of a separate building or building system, wherein the heating system is configured to heat the building or building system.
38. The data centre according to claim 37, wherein the heating system is configured to heat the building or building system preferably to 17° C. or higher.
39. A rack for computer hardware to be arranged within the data centre according to claim 20 within a high rack warehouse, wherein the data centre is configured to have storage room for the computer hardware, the data centre further comprising a heat exchanger connected to a cooling conveying liquid coolant, and wherein the rack further comprises a control mechanism to control the heat exchanger system individually and/or autonomously,
and wherein the heat exchanger is configured to discharge the entire heat volume generated by the computer hardware so that a multiplicity of the racks does not emit hot air to the data centre while in operation.
40. A method for cooling a data centre building structure comprising a multiplicity of racks in a high rack warehouse, each of which comprising storage space for heat generating computer hardware by the steps of:
conveying a coolant to at least some of the multiplicity of racks by a first cooling circuit; and
transferring the entire heat generated in the multiplicity of racks by the computer hardware to the coolant by means for heat exchanging; and
conveying a heated coolant away from the racks, wherein the means for heat exchanging are separately and/or autonomously regulated.
US13/001,947 2008-06-30 2009-06-30 Building for a computer centre with devices for efficient cooling Active 2031-01-02 US9476605B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE102008030308.9 2008-06-30
DE102008030308A DE102008030308A1 (en) 2008-06-30 2008-06-30 Building for a data center with facilities for efficient cooling
DE102008030308 2008-06-30
PCT/EP2009/004704 WO2010000440A1 (en) 2008-06-30 2009-06-30 Building for a computer centre with devices for efficient cooling

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/EP2009/004704 A-371-Of-International WO2010000440A1 (en) 2008-06-30 2009-06-30 Building for a computer centre with devices for efficient cooling

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/291,421 Continuation US10309669B2 (en) 2008-06-30 2016-10-12 Methods and apparatus for temperature control of computer racks and computer data centres

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20110220324A1 true US20110220324A1 (en) 2011-09-15
US9476605B2 US9476605B2 (en) 2016-10-25

Family

ID=41152188

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/001,947 Active 2031-01-02 US9476605B2 (en) 2008-06-30 2009-06-30 Building for a computer centre with devices for efficient cooling
US15/291,421 Expired - Fee Related US10309669B2 (en) 2008-06-30 2016-10-12 Methods and apparatus for temperature control of computer racks and computer data centres

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/291,421 Expired - Fee Related US10309669B2 (en) 2008-06-30 2016-10-12 Methods and apparatus for temperature control of computer racks and computer data centres

Country Status (10)

Country Link
US (2) US9476605B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2308279B8 (en)
KR (1) KR101738171B1 (en)
CA (1) CA2729390C (en)
DE (1) DE102008030308A1 (en)
DK (1) DK2308279T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2647319T3 (en)
PL (1) PL2308279T3 (en)
RU (1) RU2507560C2 (en)
WO (1) WO2010000440A1 (en)

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN102287972A (en) * 2010-06-18 2011-12-21 株式会社日立工业设备技术 Refrigerant circulation apparatus
JP2013096657A (en) * 2011-11-02 2013-05-20 Ntt Facilities Inc Method of group complementary control in air conditioning system
WO2014041554A1 (en) * 2012-09-12 2014-03-20 Tata Consultancy Services Limited A method for efficient designing and operating cooling infrastructure in a data center
US8931221B2 (en) 2012-11-21 2015-01-13 Google Inc. Alternative data center building designs
US20150083363A1 (en) * 2012-05-11 2015-03-26 Ecube Computing Gmbh Method for operating a data centre with efficient cooling means
JP2016000948A (en) * 2014-06-12 2016-01-07 日比谷総合設備株式会社 Efficiency improvement structure for air-conditioner in server room
US9763365B2 (en) 2011-08-01 2017-09-12 Gsi Helmholtzzentrum Für Schwerionenforschung Gmbh Mobile data centre unit with efficient cooling means
CN109520050A (en) * 2018-10-19 2019-03-26 江苏开放大学(江苏城市职业学院) A kind of air-conditioning system and its application method
US10309669B2 (en) 2008-06-30 2019-06-04 E3 Computing Gmbh Methods and apparatus for temperature control of computer racks and computer data centres
US20200141117A1 (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-07 NTT Worldwide Telecommunications Corporation Data center
US20200367388A1 (en) * 2017-07-31 2020-11-19 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development Lp Chassis cooling resource
US20230083377A1 (en) * 2021-09-16 2023-03-16 Dell Products L.P. Software-defined infrastructure for identifying and remediating an airflow deficiency scenario on a rack device

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8116080B2 (en) * 2009-12-28 2012-02-14 International Business Machines Corporation Container-based data center having greater rack density
DE202010007046U1 (en) 2010-05-20 2010-08-26 Fujitsu Technology Solutions Intellectual Property Gmbh Rack housing for receiving a plurality of fanless insertion components
RU2474889C1 (en) * 2011-08-12 2013-02-10 Открытое акционерное общество "СИТРОНИКС" Closed system of heat-dissipating equipment cooling
DE102012001510A1 (en) 2012-01-27 2013-08-01 Bernd Schenk Construction structure for data center, has computer-controlled mobile distributor for carrying out exchange of system components from magazine levels for controlling fixed coordinates according to program within system level
EP2916633A1 (en) 2014-03-03 2015-09-09 Knürr GmbH Modular data center
TWI589218B (en) * 2014-12-29 2017-06-21 營邦企業股份有限公司 Rack having fan speed compensating function and compensating method for the server rack
DE102017201079A1 (en) 2017-01-24 2018-07-26 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method of operating air conditioning and air conditioning

Citations (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2075349A (en) * 1935-08-26 1937-03-30 Williams Oil O Matic Heating Refrigeration
US5323847A (en) * 1990-08-01 1994-06-28 Hitachi, Ltd. Electronic apparatus and method of cooling the same
US6301837B1 (en) * 2000-03-13 2001-10-16 Kewaunee Scientific Corp. Rack assembly for supporting electronic units
US20010042616A1 (en) * 2000-03-21 2001-11-22 Baer Daniel B. Method and apparatus for cooling electronic enclosures
WO2002052107A2 (en) * 2000-12-22 2002-07-04 Clearspace Technology Limited Data centre building
US20040050231A1 (en) * 2002-09-13 2004-03-18 International Business Machines Corporation Scalable coolant conditioning unit with integral plate heat exchanger/expansion tank and method of use
US20040190229A1 (en) * 2003-01-10 2004-09-30 Caci J. Claude Self-sustaining environmental control unit
US20060037331A1 (en) * 2003-03-07 2006-02-23 Michael Nicolai Liquid cooling system
US20060289149A1 (en) * 2005-06-24 2006-12-28 Foxconn Technology Co., Ltd. Heat dissipating device with heat reservoir
US7315448B1 (en) * 2005-06-01 2008-01-01 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Air-cooled heat generating device airflow control system
US20080029250A1 (en) * 2006-06-01 2008-02-07 Andrew Carlson Warm Water Cooling
US20080093958A1 (en) * 2006-10-20 2008-04-24 Peterson Karl J High density telecommunications mounting drawer
US7367384B2 (en) * 2004-11-14 2008-05-06 Liebert Corporation Integrated heat exchangers in a rack for vertical board style computer systems
US20080236070A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Gilles Serinet Building structure intended to host computer data
US20090126385A1 (en) * 2005-02-07 2009-05-21 Knuerr Ag Switch cabinet
US20090218078A1 (en) * 2008-02-28 2009-09-03 International Business Machines Corporation Variable flow computer cooling system for a data center and method of operation
US20090229283A1 (en) * 2007-08-24 2009-09-17 Joseph Marsala Method and apparatus for isothermal cooling of hard disk drive arrays using a pumped refrigerant loop
US7971446B2 (en) * 2006-06-01 2011-07-05 Exaflop Llc Computing environments
US8395896B2 (en) * 2007-02-24 2013-03-12 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Redundant cooling systems and methods

Family Cites Families (35)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3334684A (en) 1964-07-08 1967-08-08 Control Data Corp Cooling system for data processing equipment
FR2588072B1 (en) 1985-09-30 1987-12-11 Jeumont Schneider DISSIPATION SYSTEM FOR POWER SEMICONDUCTOR ELEMENTS
US5509468A (en) 1993-12-23 1996-04-23 Storage Technology Corporation Assembly for dissipating thermal energy contained in an electrical circuit element and associated method therefor
GB0207382D0 (en) 2002-03-28 2002-05-08 Holland Heating Uk Ltd Computer cabinet
US7278273B1 (en) 2003-12-30 2007-10-09 Google Inc. Modular data center
DE102004008460B4 (en) * 2004-02-17 2006-02-02 Rittal Gmbh & Co. Kg Arrangement for cooling control cabinets
DE202004003309U1 (en) * 2004-03-01 2004-08-12 Kuse, Kolja Cooling of a computer cluster uses individual fans to draw air over motherboards with main fan to evacuate housing
US20050207116A1 (en) * 2004-03-22 2005-09-22 Yatskov Alexander I Systems and methods for inter-cooling computer cabinets
US7810341B2 (en) * 2004-04-22 2010-10-12 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Redundant upgradeable, modular data center cooling apparatus
DE202004006552U1 (en) * 2004-04-26 2004-07-08 Knürr AG Cooling system for device and network cabinets
JP4321413B2 (en) 2004-09-02 2009-08-26 株式会社日立製作所 Disk array device
US7266741B2 (en) 2004-11-19 2007-09-04 Fong Luk Generation of test vectors for testing electronic circuits taking into account of defect probability
US7385810B2 (en) 2005-04-18 2008-06-10 International Business Machines Corporation Apparatus and method for facilitating cooling of an electronics rack employing a heat exchange assembly mounted to an outlet door cover of the electronics rack
US7551971B2 (en) 2006-09-13 2009-06-23 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Operation ready transportable data center in a shipping container
US7511959B2 (en) 2007-04-25 2009-03-31 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Scalable computing apparatus
US7477514B2 (en) 2007-05-04 2009-01-13 International Business Machines Corporation Method of facilitating cooling of electronics racks of a data center employing multiple cooling stations
US8320125B1 (en) 2007-06-29 2012-11-27 Exaflop Llc Modular data center cooling
US7864530B1 (en) 2007-09-28 2011-01-04 Exaflop Llc Changing data center cooling modes
US8113009B2 (en) 2007-10-22 2012-02-14 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Electronic device cooling system and electronic device cooling apparatus
US7963119B2 (en) 2007-11-26 2011-06-21 International Business Machines Corporation Hybrid air and liquid coolant conditioning unit for facilitating cooling of one or more electronics racks of a data center
DE102008030308A1 (en) 2008-06-30 2009-12-31 Lindenstruth, Volker, Prof. Building for a data center with facilities for efficient cooling
US20110175498A1 (en) 2008-09-30 2011-07-21 Cullen Bash Data Center
GB0905870D0 (en) 2009-04-03 2009-05-20 Eaton Williams Group Ltd A rear door heat exchanger
US20110056675A1 (en) 2009-09-09 2011-03-10 International Business Machines Corporation Apparatus and method for adjusting coolant flow resistance through liquid-cooled electronics rack(s)
US8286442B2 (en) 2009-11-02 2012-10-16 Exaflop Llc Data center with low power usage effectiveness
US8116080B2 (en) 2009-12-28 2012-02-14 International Business Machines Corporation Container-based data center having greater rack density
US8789384B2 (en) 2010-03-23 2014-07-29 International Business Machines Corporation Computer rack cooling using independently-controlled flow of coolants through a dual-section heat exchanger
GB201008099D0 (en) 2010-05-14 2010-06-30 Eaton Williams Group Ltd A rear door heat exchanger
DE102010031909A1 (en) 2010-07-22 2012-01-26 Airbus Operations Gmbh sealing system
TWI422318B (en) 2010-10-29 2014-01-01 Ind Tech Res Inst Data center module
TW201229451A (en) 2011-01-11 2012-07-16 Hon Hai Prec Ind Co Ltd Heat circle system
US8804334B2 (en) 2011-05-25 2014-08-12 International Business Machines Corporation Multi-rack, door-mounted heat exchanger
EP2555605A1 (en) 2011-08-01 2013-02-06 GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH Mobile data centre unit with efficient cooling means
EP2663172A1 (en) 2012-05-11 2013-11-13 eCube Computing GmbH Method for operating a data centre with efficient cooling means
US10880180B2 (en) 2015-09-16 2020-12-29 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for data analytics management

Patent Citations (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2075349A (en) * 1935-08-26 1937-03-30 Williams Oil O Matic Heating Refrigeration
US5323847A (en) * 1990-08-01 1994-06-28 Hitachi, Ltd. Electronic apparatus and method of cooling the same
US6301837B1 (en) * 2000-03-13 2001-10-16 Kewaunee Scientific Corp. Rack assembly for supporting electronic units
US20010042616A1 (en) * 2000-03-21 2001-11-22 Baer Daniel B. Method and apparatus for cooling electronic enclosures
WO2002052107A2 (en) * 2000-12-22 2002-07-04 Clearspace Technology Limited Data centre building
US20040050231A1 (en) * 2002-09-13 2004-03-18 International Business Machines Corporation Scalable coolant conditioning unit with integral plate heat exchanger/expansion tank and method of use
US20040190229A1 (en) * 2003-01-10 2004-09-30 Caci J. Claude Self-sustaining environmental control unit
US20060037331A1 (en) * 2003-03-07 2006-02-23 Michael Nicolai Liquid cooling system
US7367384B2 (en) * 2004-11-14 2008-05-06 Liebert Corporation Integrated heat exchangers in a rack for vertical board style computer systems
US20090126385A1 (en) * 2005-02-07 2009-05-21 Knuerr Ag Switch cabinet
US7315448B1 (en) * 2005-06-01 2008-01-01 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Air-cooled heat generating device airflow control system
US20060289149A1 (en) * 2005-06-24 2006-12-28 Foxconn Technology Co., Ltd. Heat dissipating device with heat reservoir
US20080029250A1 (en) * 2006-06-01 2008-02-07 Andrew Carlson Warm Water Cooling
US7971446B2 (en) * 2006-06-01 2011-07-05 Exaflop Llc Computing environments
US20080093958A1 (en) * 2006-10-20 2008-04-24 Peterson Karl J High density telecommunications mounting drawer
US8395896B2 (en) * 2007-02-24 2013-03-12 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Redundant cooling systems and methods
US20080236070A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Gilles Serinet Building structure intended to host computer data
US20090229283A1 (en) * 2007-08-24 2009-09-17 Joseph Marsala Method and apparatus for isothermal cooling of hard disk drive arrays using a pumped refrigerant loop
US20090218078A1 (en) * 2008-02-28 2009-09-03 International Business Machines Corporation Variable flow computer cooling system for a data center and method of operation

Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10309669B2 (en) 2008-06-30 2019-06-04 E3 Computing Gmbh Methods and apparatus for temperature control of computer racks and computer data centres
US20110308262A1 (en) * 2010-06-18 2011-12-22 Hitachi Plant Technologies Ltd. Refrigerant circulation apparatus
CN102287972A (en) * 2010-06-18 2011-12-21 株式会社日立工业设备技术 Refrigerant circulation apparatus
US9763365B2 (en) 2011-08-01 2017-09-12 Gsi Helmholtzzentrum Für Schwerionenforschung Gmbh Mobile data centre unit with efficient cooling means
JP2013096657A (en) * 2011-11-02 2013-05-20 Ntt Facilities Inc Method of group complementary control in air conditioning system
US20150083363A1 (en) * 2012-05-11 2015-03-26 Ecube Computing Gmbh Method for operating a data centre with efficient cooling means
US10653041B2 (en) * 2012-05-11 2020-05-12 Ecube Computing Gmbh Fluid-cooled data centres without air conditioning, and methods for operating same
US9959371B2 (en) 2012-09-12 2018-05-01 Tata Consultancy Services Limited Method for efficient designing and operating cooling infrastructure in a data center
WO2014041554A1 (en) * 2012-09-12 2014-03-20 Tata Consultancy Services Limited A method for efficient designing and operating cooling infrastructure in a data center
US8931221B2 (en) 2012-11-21 2015-01-13 Google Inc. Alternative data center building designs
US9167724B1 (en) 2012-11-21 2015-10-20 Google Inc. Alternative data center building designs
JP2016000948A (en) * 2014-06-12 2016-01-07 日比谷総合設備株式会社 Efficiency improvement structure for air-conditioner in server room
US20200367388A1 (en) * 2017-07-31 2020-11-19 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development Lp Chassis cooling resource
CN109520050A (en) * 2018-10-19 2019-03-26 江苏开放大学(江苏城市职业学院) A kind of air-conditioning system and its application method
US20200141117A1 (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-07 NTT Worldwide Telecommunications Corporation Data center
US10900228B2 (en) * 2018-11-06 2021-01-26 Ntt Ltd Japan Corporation Data center
US20230083377A1 (en) * 2021-09-16 2023-03-16 Dell Products L.P. Software-defined infrastructure for identifying and remediating an airflow deficiency scenario on a rack device
US11765870B2 (en) * 2021-09-16 2023-09-19 Dell Products L.P. Software-defined infrastructure for identifying and remediating an airflow deficiency scenario on a rack device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
KR20110091640A (en) 2011-08-12
ES2647319T3 (en) 2017-12-20
US9476605B2 (en) 2016-10-25
DK2308279T3 (en) 2017-12-11
CA2729390C (en) 2017-10-24
CA2729390A1 (en) 2010-01-07
PL2308279T3 (en) 2018-04-30
US20170254551A1 (en) 2017-09-07
WO2010000440A1 (en) 2010-01-07
RU2507560C2 (en) 2014-02-20
EP2308279A1 (en) 2011-04-13
RU2011101924A (en) 2012-08-10
KR101738171B1 (en) 2017-05-19
US10309669B2 (en) 2019-06-04
EP2308279B1 (en) 2017-09-06
EP2308279B8 (en) 2017-10-11
DE102008030308A1 (en) 2009-12-31

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US10309669B2 (en) Methods and apparatus for temperature control of computer racks and computer data centres
US20210092866A1 (en) Fluid-cooled data centres without air coinditioning, and methods for operating same
EP2740338B1 (en) Mobile data centre unit with efficient cooling means
JP5209802B2 (en) Hot aisle containment type cooling system and method
US9913407B2 (en) Energy efficient vertical data center
CA2803497C (en) Prefabricated vertical data center modules and method of large-scale deployment
JP2008502082A (en) Data center cooling
US11638365B2 (en) Hybrid data center rack
JP6525826B2 (en) Data center air conditioning system
CA2904518C (en) Energy efficient vertical data center

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: ECUBE COMPUTING GMBH, GERMANY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:LINDENSTRUTH, VOLKER;STOCKER, HORST;REEL/FRAME:035821/0172

Effective date: 20131112

AS Assignment

Owner name: E3 CUBE COMPUTING GMBH, GERMANY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:LINDENSTRUTH, VOLKER;STOCKER, HORST;REEL/FRAME:035859/0338

Effective date: 20131112

AS Assignment

Owner name: E3 COMPUTING GMBH, GERMANY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:LINDENSTRUTH, VOLKER;STOCKER, HORST;REEL/FRAME:035936/0638

Effective date: 20131112

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: SURCHARGE FOR LATE PAYMENT, SMALL ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M2554); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: SMALL ENTITY

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YR, SMALL ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M2551); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: SMALL ENTITY

Year of fee payment: 4